Maryland Casualty Co. v. Superior Court

267 P. 169, 91 Cal. App. 356, 1928 Cal. App. LEXIS 984
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 26, 1928
DocketDocket No. 6412.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 267 P. 169 (Maryland Casualty Co. v. Superior Court) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Maryland Casualty Co. v. Superior Court, 267 P. 169, 91 Cal. App. 356, 1928 Cal. App. LEXIS 984 (Cal. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

KOFORD, P. J.

This is an original application for a peremptory writ of mandate to dismiss a certain action pending in the said Superior Court wherein S. W. Towle Lumber Company (a domestic corporation), is plaintiff, and G. P. Anderson, Maryland Casualty Company (the petitioner), and others, are defendants. The alternative writ was issued by the Supreme Court and made returnable in this court. The grounds upon which it is claimed the said action should be dismissed arise out of the fact that the plaintiff corporation in that action,-Towle Lumber Company, had suffered the penalties prescribed by law for failure to pay its corporate license and franchise taxes to the state of California. The action is for breach of contract and foreclosure of mechanic’s lien. The petitioner had executed, pursuant to the Mechanic’s Lien Law, a bond to secure the payment of mechanics’ liens and for that reason was a defendant in said action.

■The facts made to appear to us on this hearing are that at the time of the execution of the contract under which the mechanic’s lien arose, and also at the time the said action was instituted, the said Towle Lumber Company had not paid its license tax and franchise tax; but after the *358 suit was instituted and a year before the trial of the action upon its merits the said corporation had paid and discharged the said taxes and had been reinstated.

Section 11 of the Corporation License Act, Statutes 1915, chapter 190, page 422, and amendments thereto (Deering’s General Laws 1923, Act 1743), provides that the corporate rights, privileges, and powers of domestic corporations which have failed to pay the said tax shall be suspended and incapable of being asserted for any purpose (with certain exceptions not involved here) until said tax and all accrued penalties, etc., are paid. The section concludes with: “Every contract made in violation of this section is hereby declared to be void.” -

Section 3669c of the Political Code contains substantially the same language with respect to the franchise tax.

In the said action pending in the Superior Court the complaint alleged the due incorporation and existence of the plaintiff, Towle Lumber Company. The defendant’s answer merely denied this allegation on information and belief. During the course of the trial defendant discovered that the plaintiff corporation had suffered the suspension of its corporate powers as above set forth, and thereupon made a motion during the course of the trial to be permitted to amend the answer in said action so as to make the denial of the corporate existence of the plaintiff positive instead of upon lack of information and belief. Said motion was denied by the court. One month later the defendant, who is petitioner here, moved the said Superior Court for an order dismissing the said action upon the grounds that owing to the suspension of the plaintiff’s corporate powers, (1) the contract sued upon was void, and (2) that the corporation was legally incapable of instituting the said action at the time the complaint was filed. Said motion was supported by an affidavit setting forth the facts regarding the suspension and revival of the corporate powers of said plaintiff. This motion was also denied by the court. The petition herein alleges that the said Superior Court has the said action now under submission for decision and intends to render a judgment therein upon the merits thereof. The petition prays that the said court be compelled to dismiss the said action without rendering a judgment upon the merits thereof.

*359 To the contention that the action should be dismissed because it is brought upon a contract which by law is void, the respondent replies that the defendants in said action are estopped from denying the validity of said contract because of benefits received thereunder. These are issues at law and fact for the trial court to determine only at the trial of the action. A judgment on these issues is on the merits of the action. No reason exists why an action should be dismissed instead of being decided upon its merits because the claim sued upon is founded upon a void contract. This is not the practice with respect to suits brought upon contracts void for other reasons, such, for example, as being within the statute of frauds and not in writing. In such ease the issue is whether or not the contract sued upon does or does not exist and the issue is raised by pleadings which upon the one side allege the contract and on the other side deny it. ■ There is no reason for a distinction in this respect between contracts void under one statute or void under another.

Whether the contract sued upon is void or not is merely one of the considerations for the trial court in connection with the evidence and all the pleadings in the case. Whether or not plaintiff has a valid chose in action is the ultimate issue to be decided by the court in any trial of an action upon its merits. Upon this petition for mandate to dismiss the action we have neither the right nor the power to determine the mérits of the said action. That question is not legally before us. The evidence and pleadings in the action are not before us. Petitioner relies on Ransome-Crummey Co. v. Superior Court, 188 Cal. 393 [205 Pac. 446], and Van Landingham v. United Tuna Packers, 189 Cal. 353 [208 Pac. 973]. The former of these two eases holds that where the corporate powers of a corporation plaintiff, after the institution of an action and during its pendency, has been suspended for nonpayment of license and franchise taxes, the said corporation during the period of such suspension of powers, is wholly unable to either give or receive a legal notice carrying forward the prosecution of the said action. In the Van Landingham case it is held that such a suspended corporation during the period of its suspension has no power to execute a contract, that the attempted execution of a contract by such a sus *360 pended corporation is void and cannot be treated as the valid contract of a de facto corporation. Under these authorities it may well be that the contract sued on in the action under consideration is void. There may be other issues in the case, however, not known to us which may give the trial a different aspect. The pleadings and evidence may be such that a recovery may be had notwithstanding the contract be void. There may be an estoppel. There may be a contract implied by law. The constitution and statutes may give a lien. These matters we do not decide. If nothing in the case warrants a judgment in favor of plaintiff on the merits, petitioner may look forward to a judgment in its favor on the merits. The trial court has the jurisdiction and power to determine the issues which go to the merits of the action. To argue that the pleadings and evidence warrant a decision only in favor of petitioner is of no avail. Mandamus is not a substitute for an appeal from an erroneous judgment and is certainly not such before the judgment is made.

It is claimed by petitioner that a motion to dismiss the action, however, upon the ground of the incapacity of the plaintiff to institute the action will lie where the facts warrant it because the granting of such a motion is not a judgment upon the merits.

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Bluebook (online)
267 P. 169, 91 Cal. App. 356, 1928 Cal. App. LEXIS 984, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maryland-casualty-co-v-superior-court-calctapp-1928.